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Channapatna Toys Tour From Bangalore: The Tiger King's Gift to the World That Michelle Obama Bought and Barack Obama Received

22 min · 10 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Channapatna Toys Tour From Bangalore: The Tiger King's Gift to the World That Michelle Obama Bought and Barack Obama Received

Descripción

In the last decade of the 18th century, the most formidable military adversary the British East India Company ever faced in South India looked at a small town 60 kilometres from his capital and made a decision that would outlast his empire, his wars and his death in battle by over two centuries. Tipu Sultan decided to make Channapatna the toy capital of India. He created an international export market for the wooden lacquerware toys that local craftsmen had been making in this small Karnataka town. He provided land for artisan workshops. He established trade connections with Persian, Egyptian, Chinese and Turkish merchants who visited his capital at Srirangapatna. The toys that left Channapatna on those 18th century trade routes were made from locally-grown ivory wood, coloured with vegetable dyes made from turmeric, spinach and beetroot and finished with lac melted by friction from a spinning lathe in a technique that was already ancient when Tipu Sultan patronised it. In 1904 the Maharaja of Mysore sent a craftsman named Bavas Miyan from Channapatna to Japan to study its advanced lacquerware and toy-making techniques. Bavas Miyan returned and introduced the Japanese-inspired doll form that you now see on every Channapatna toy shelf, the rounded wobbling figure that children of every culture reach for instantly. In 2006 the Indian government gave Channapatna toys a Geographical Indication tag, placing them in the same protected category as Darjeeling tea and Kanchipuram silk. In 2010 Michelle Obama bought Channapatna toys during her visit to India. In 2015 Barack Obama received them as a gift when he visited the country. From Tipu Sultan's 18th century export market to the White House. In two centuries. In this episode we take you on the complete Channapatna toys tour from Bangalore. We tell the full story of how a king's aesthetic passion created a craft tradition that has survived wars, colonial rule, the near-death experience of cheap Chinese plastic toy competition and two centuries of economic turbulence to arrive at the present day with over 1500 artisan families still making what Tipu Sultan's craftsmen made, in the same town, with the same wood, the same dyes and the same spinning lathe technique. We take you inside a working Channapatna toy workshop and describe the mesmerising process of watching lac melt onto spinning ivory wood in real time. We take you to Asia's largest silk cocoon auction market, one of the most extraordinary and most completely unexpected commercial spectacles available on any day trip from Bangalore. We explore Janapada Loka, the Karnataka folk art museum that is one of the most underappreciated cultural institutions in South India. And we visit the Big Banyan Tree at Dodda Aalada Mara, a single tree over 400 years old whose aerial roots cover three acres of ground and whose canopy was once used as a village marketplace. This is the Channapatna toys tour from Bangalore with 5 Senses Tours. And it is unlike anything else available on a day trip from the city. What You Will Discover in This Episode The full story of Tipu Sultan's extraordinary role in creating the international market for Channapatna toys in the 18th century, including the Daria Daulat Bagh trading pavilion he built specifically for meetings with overseas merchants, the 25 to 30 acres of land he provided for artisan workshops and the export connections to Persia, Egypt, China and Turkey that made Channapatna toys a global product two centuries before anyone used the word globalisation The remarkable story of Bavas Miyan, the Channapatna craftsman sponsored by the Maharaja of Mysore to travel to Japan in 1904 to study advanced lacquerware techniques, and how the Japanese doll-making tradition he encountered there produced the rounded wobbling Channapatna doll figure that is now one of the most recognisable craft objects in India The complete toy-making process at a Channapatna workshop, from the sourcing of locally-grown ivory wood through the lathe-spinning technique in which lac sticks are pressed against spinning wood to melt colour into the grain, to the vegetable dyes made from turmeric for yellow, spinach for green and beetroot for red, to the palm leaf polish that gives the finished toy its distinctive warm sheen Why Channapatna toys faced a genuine existential crisis at the turn of the 21st century as cheap Chinese plastic toys flooded the Indian market, how the Karnataka Handicrafts Development Corporation and multiple social enterprises intervened to save the craft, and how the 2006 Geographical Indication tag formally recognised the toys' unique and protected status alongside Darjeeling tea and Kanchipuram silk The extraordinary moment when Michelle Obama bought Channapatna toys during her India visit in 2010 and Barack Obama received them as a presidential gift in 2015, and what these two moments meant for the visibility and confidence of the Channapatna artisan community Asia's largest silk cocoon auction market near Channapatna, where thousands of silk farmers from across the Ramanagara district arrive with their cocoons to be graded and auctioned in real time to silk reelers whose thread will eventually become the Mysore silk sarees and Bangalore silk garments that are exported worldwide, and why this completely authentic working commercial market is one of the most extraordinary and most unexpected experiences available on any Bangalore day trip Janapada Loka, the Karnataka Janapada Trust's folk art and rural heritage museum on the Bangalore-Mysore highway, whose collection documents the full breadth of Karnataka's village folk traditions from wooden shrine sculptures and terracotta figurines to agricultural implements, musical instruments, textile traditions and performance arts, and why it is one of the most underappreciated cultural institutions in South India The Big Banyan Tree at Dodda Aalada Mara, a single organism over 400 years old whose aerial roots have grown down into the ground across three acres of land creating an entire forest from a single tree, whose canopy was once used as a village marketplace and which remains one of Karnataka's most beloved and most extraordinary natural landmarks Why responsible cultural tourism is one of the most effective tools available for the long-term survival of craft traditions like Channapatna's, how 5 Senses Tours structures its workshop visits to ensure that a fair proportion of visitor spending reaches the craftspeople directly and why every toy purchased on this tour is a direct investment in the continuation of a 250-year tradition How to plan your complete Channapatna toys tour from Bangalore with 5 Senses Tours, what is included, the best time to visit for the most dramatic silk cocoon auction experience and how to combine the tour with Mysore, Hampi, Belur and Halebid and the wider Karnataka heritage circuit Experience the Channapatna Toys Tour From Bangalore With 5 Senses Tours Tipu Sultan's craftsmen are still at their lathes in Channapatna. The ivory wood is still being sourced from the same managed forests. The lac is still being melted by friction onto spinning wood. The turmeric is still making yellow. The spinach is still making green. The beetroot is still making red. Two and a half centuries of unbroken craft tradition is available as a day trip from Bangalore. And the only way to experience it with the full depth of its extraordinary story is with a 5 Senses Tours cultural guide who has spent years building relationships with the artisan families of Channapatna and who delivers the complete history, the craft process and the human stories behind every toy at the exact moment and location where each story has its greatest impact. Our Cha...

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Portada del episodio Indus Valley Script Decipherment: The 4000-Year-Old Mystery That AI, a Million Dollar Prize and a Race Between Scholars Is Finally Beginning to Crack

Indus Valley Script Decipherment: The 4000-Year-Old Mystery That AI, a Million Dollar Prize and a Race Between Scholars Is Finally Beginning to Crack

There is a seal in the collection of the National Museum in Delhi. It is approximately four centimetres square. It is made of steatite, a soft grey stone. It was carved somewhere in the Indus Valley between 2600 and 1900 BCE. And on its surface, above the carved image of a humped bull, there are five symbols. Nobody knows what they say. Not for lack of trying. Since the Archaeological Survey of India announced its first findings on the Indus Valley Civilisation in 1924, over 5000 inscriptions have been excavated from sites across present-day India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Linguists, archaeologists, cryptographers, computer scientists and now artificial intelligence researchers have spent over a century attempting to decode them. None has produced a result that the scholarly community has accepted as definitively correct. The Indus Valley script remains the last major undeciphered writing system of an advanced ancient civilisation. It is older than Egyptian hieroglyphs. It is older than Mesopotamian cuneiform. It was used by a civilisation that built grid-pattern cities with indoor plumbing, standardised weights and a trade network reaching Mesopotamia and the Persian Gulf at a time when most of the world was still living in scattered agricultural settlements. And we still cannot read what its people wrote. But 2025 has brought this hundred-year mystery to its most urgent and most publicly charged moment. The Tamil Nadu government has offered a one million dollar prize for successful decipherment. Artificial intelligence researchers are applying deep learning algorithms to the script's structure with results generating genuine excitement in the field. And a researcher called Yajnadevam has published a cryptanalytic decipherment claiming to have read over 500 inscriptions in post-Vedic Sanskrit using methods borrowed from modern cryptography. The race to crack history's greatest code is at its most intense. What You Will Discover in This Episode The complete story of the Indus Valley Civilisation, which flourished between approximately 3300 and 1300 BCE across an area larger than ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia combined, its grid-pattern cities, indoor plumbing, standardised weights, maritime trade network and the extraordinary sophistication that makes the silence of its script so consequential Why the Indus Valley script decipherment challenge is uniquely difficult, average inscription length of only four to five signs, no bilingual text equivalent to the Rosetta Stone, an unknown root language and a politically charged scholarly debate about whether the underlying language is Dravidian, Sanskrit or not a language at all The AI revolution in Indus script research, including transformer models published in the Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics in 2025, deep learning tools that are producing genuine structural insights into the script's sequential patterns and the application of computer vision algorithms to digitise and standardise the entire inscription corpus The Yajnadevam cryptanalytic decipherment of 2024, the most methodologically complete claim yet published, which treats the entire corpus of Indus inscriptions as a single large cryptogram using Claude Shannon's mathematical framework and claims readings of over 500 inscriptions in grammatically correct post-Vedic Sanskrit, along with the scholarly response and why it remains contested The Tamil Nadu one million dollar Iravatham Mahadevan Prize announced in January 2025, named after the most significant Indian scholar in the history of Indus script research, how it has transformed a century-old specialist debate into a global race and why it reflects Tamil Nadu's specific interest in the Dravidian hypothesis The Dholavira signboard, the most extraordinary single Indus Valley inscription ever found, approximately ten feet long with ten large white gypsum characters mounted above the northern gateway of the ancient city of Dholavira in Gujarat so that every person entering the city would see it, still completely unread after four thousand years What the excavations at Dholavira reveal about the sophistication of the Indus Valley Civilisation even without reading a single word of its script, including the most sophisticated hydraulic engineering system of the ancient world, standardised city planning and a water management system capable of sustaining the city through multiple years of drought The three competing theories for the Indus script, the Dravidian hypothesis associated with Asko Parpola and Iravatham Mahadevan and supported by a Tamil Nadu study finding 60 percent sign similarity between Indus script and early Tamil Nadu graffiti markings, the Sanskrit hypothesis associated with the Yajnadevam decipherment and its contested relationship to the Aryan migration debate, and the non-linguistic hypothesis that the script may not encode a spoken language at all The ancient port of Lothal near Ahmedabad in Gujarat, where the world's earliest known dry dock demonstrates the maritime engineering capability behind the Indus Valley trade network and where trade seals were used to authenticate cargo bound for Mesopotamia and the Persian Gulf four thousand years ago How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete Indus Valley heritage to life for international travellers through expert guided experiences at the UNESCO World Heritage city of Dholavira and the ancient port of Lothal Experience the Indus Valley Heritage With 5 Senses Tours The gateway where the Dholavira signboard once stood is still there. The ancient dry dock at Lothal is still there. The seals in the museums are still not speaking. But for the first time in a hundred years of trying, the people who are working to make them speak are closer than they have ever been. Our Dholavira tour takes you to the UNESCO World Heritage city in the Rann of Kutch in Gujarat, where the most important Indus Valley inscription was found, with expert cultural guides who bring the complete story of the Indus Valley Civilisation and the decipherment challenge to life at the exact place where it happened, at https://5sensestours.com/tour/dholavira-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/dholavira-tour/] Our Lothal tour covers the ancient Indus Valley port city near Ahmedabad whose dry dock is the world's earliest known, at https://5sensestours.com/tour/lothal-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/lothal-tour/] Our Ahmedabad tours hub covers the complete Gujarat heritage circuit connecting Dholavira and Lothal to the UNESCO World Heritage pols of Ahmedabad and the extraordinary stepwell at Rani ki Vav in Patan, at https://5sensestours.com/home-ahmedabad-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-ahmedabad-tours/] For a customised private Indus Valley heritage journey covering the complete Gujarat archaeological circuit, contact us at https://5sensestours.com/ [https://5sensestours.com/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

Ayer20 min
Portada del episodio Madhava: The Kerala Mathematician Who Invented Calculus 200 Years Before Newton and Whose Work May Have Reached Europe Through a Spy Network of Jesuit Missionaries

Madhava: The Kerala Mathematician Who Invented Calculus 200 Years Before Newton and Whose Work May Have Reached Europe Through a Spy Network of Jesuit Missionaries

In 1666 Isaac Newton invented calculus. This is what most of the world was taught and what most of the world still believes. There is a problem with this version of events. A mathematician in Kerala had already done it. In the 14th century. And the Cambridge University Professor of Mathematics George Gheverghese Joseph has stated that the priority of Kerala developments in the calculus over that of Newton and Leibniz is now beyond doubt. His name was Madhava of Sangamagrama. He was born around 1340 CE in a small town near what is now Thrissur in Kerala. He died around 1425 CE, more than two centuries before Newton was born. And the mathematical tradition he founded, the Kerala School of Astronomy and Mathematics, produced infinite series expansions for sine, cosine, tangent and arctangent that are today formally known by the names of the European mathematicians who rediscovered them centuries after Madhava had already solved them. Madhava-Newton. Madhava-Leibniz. Madhava-Gregory. Madhava-Taylor. The names that appear in every university mathematics syllabus worldwide contain the name of a 14th-century Kerala mathematician as the first author. And almost nobody outside the mathematical history community knows this. But the story does not end with the mathematics. It ends with a question historians of science are still actively debating. Did the Jesuit missionaries who were active on the Kerala coast in the 15th and 16th centuries, trading from the ancient port of Muziris near Madhava's own birthplace, carry the Kerala calculus back to Europe in their manuscripts and letters? Did Newton and Leibniz build on mathematical foundations that an Indian mathematician had already laid? The answer is not yet proven. But the circumstantial evidence is extraordinary. What You Will Discover in This Episode The complete story of Madhava of Sangamagrama, born around 1340 CE in Sangamagrama, present-day Irinjalakuda in the Thrissur district of Kerala, and how he founded the Kerala School of Astronomy and Mathematics that continued producing world-class mathematical work for over two hundred years after his death How Madhava built explicitly on the calculus concepts that Bhaskara II of Bijapur in Karnataka had described two centuries earlier in his Siddhanta Shiromani of 1150 CE, and why the distinction matters, Bhaskara II described calculus concepts in application, Madhava formalised calculus as a complete mathematical system, and together they represent the most significant contribution to the development of calculus made anywhere in the world before Newton What an infinite series actually is and why Madhava's discovery that irrational quantities like pi can be expressed as infinite series of progressively smaller terms converging to an exact value is the foundational concept of modern mathematical analysis, the decisive step from finite to infinite procedures that Cambridge mathematicians have described as the kernel of modern classical analysis The specific series for pi that Madhava discovered and that Leibniz independently rediscovered in 1676, today known as the Madhava-Leibniz series, and how Madhava used it to calculate pi correctly to eleven decimal places in 14th-century Kerala, a precision sufficient for almost every practical application including the GPS satellite navigation systems whose mathematics traces foundational concepts back to his work The Gregory-Leibniz series for the arctangent function, taught in every university calculus course in the world, which was known in Kerala three hundred years before either James Gregory or Gottfried Leibniz was born, and why the attribution question is one of the most significant issues of intellectual priority in the history of mathematics The extraordinary transmission question, whether the Jesuit missionaries who arrived on the Kerala Malabar Coast in the 16th century, who were extraordinarily well educated men with strong mathematical backgrounds in active communication with the leading mathematical centres of Europe, were the channel through which Madhava's infinite series reached Newton and Leibniz, and why the circumstantial evidence is compelling even though documentary proof has not yet been found The ancient port of Muziris near Madhava's birthplace in the Thrissur district, one of the most commercially active ports on the Indian Ocean coast, where Roman amphorae, Mediterranean glass beads and coins confirm extraordinary ancient trading connections, and how the same port through which Roman merchants imported Indian pepper in the 1st century CE may have been the port through which Jesuit missionaries exported Indian mathematics to Europe in the 16th century How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete Madhava and Kerala mathematical heritage to life for international travellers through expert guided experiences in the Thrissur district, the Muziris heritage circuit and the complete Fort Kochi heritage Experience Madhava's Kerala With 5 Senses Tours The landscape where Madhava worked out the infinite series for pi on palm leaf manuscripts in 14th-century Kerala is the same landscape you look out over from a houseboat on the Kerala backwaters today. Our Kochi tours cover the complete Madhava and Muziris heritage circuit alongside the Jewish, Portuguese, Dutch and British heritage of Fort Kochi at https://5sensestours.com/home-kochi-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-kochi-tours/] Our Fort Kochi heritage walk brings the most cosmopolitan port city in Asian history to life on foot at https://5sensestours.com/tour/fort-kochi-heritage-walk/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/fort-kochi-heritage-walk/] Our Kochi food walk connects the extraordinary culinary heritage of the Malabar spice trade to the living food culture of Fort Kochi today at https://5sensestours.com/tour/kochi-food-walk/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/kochi-food-walk/] For travellers who want to experience the complete story of Indian mathematical genius from its Karnataka origins to its Kerala culmination, our Aurangabad tours cover the Deccan heritage of the Rashtrakuta dynasty that patronised Mahavira and produced the cultural tradition that Bhaskara II inherited at https://5sensestours.com/home-aurangabad-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-aurangabad-tours/] For a customised private Kerala heritage journey connecting Madhava's birthplace, the Muziris archaeological site and the complete Fort Kochi heritage circuit, contact us at https://5sensestours.com/ [https://5sensestours.com/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

8 de jul de 202622 min
Portada del episodio Wheat vs Rice: How Two Grains Quietly Shaped Two Indias

Wheat vs Rice: How Two Grains Quietly Shaped Two Indias

Why does Punjab celebrate its new year in April with bonfires and a festival built around cut wheat, while Tamil Nadu celebrates its harvest festival in January, watching a pot of rice boil over with milk and jaggery. Why do the temples of the south rise in towering gopurams visible from a distance, while many temples of the north sit smaller and more intimately set into a riverbank or hillside. Why does the north's classical music tradition favour a single performer exploring a raga alone, while the south's classical tradition favours an ensemble in constant, audible dialogue with itself. One honest, well documented answer, among several that matter, turns out to be sitting on a plate in front of you at almost every meal. It is the grain. This episode traces how two different staple crops, wheat in the north and rice in the south, quietly shaped two different calendars, cuisines and artistic traditions across India over thousands of years, while being equally honest about where this theory holds up and where it does not. What You Will Discover in This Episode How the Indus Valley Civilisation grew wheat and barley as winter staples and rice as a summer crop over four thousand years ago, and how archaeologists at Rakhigarhi found evidence of sophisticated seasonal multi-cropping that predates comparable evidence from Mesopotamia or Egypt Why wheat ripens all at once in spring across the entire northern wheat belt, while rice, dependent on monsoon timing that varies by region, staggers its harvest across a much wider stretch of the calendar Why Punjab's Baisakhi falls every April, marking the wheat harvest and the Punjabi new year, while Tamil Nadu's Pongal falls every January, named for the moment rice cooked with milk and jaggery boils over an earthen pot, and how Onam, Bihu and Nabanna each follow this same underlying logic across other regions How North Indian cuisine centres on wheat breads and dairy based gravies while South Indian cuisine centres on rice, fermented batters and coconut based dishes, and why neither tradition should be read as more or less communal than the other Why North Indian Nagara temples are built around a curved shikhara tower echoing a mountain peak with a small, dim sanctum at their centre, while South Indian Dravida temples rise in towering gopurams visible for miles, built around vast courtyards for grain storage, education and annual festivals, and why this difference likely reflects geography and centuries of stable patronage rather than any difference in devotion The genuinely surprising case of Indian classical music, where the northern Hindustani tradition, born in royal courts, favours a single performer's unhurried solo exploration of a raga, while the southern Carnatic tradition, born in temples, favours a tightly coordinated ensemble in constant real time dialogue, a pattern that runs in the opposite direction from what the wheat and rice theory would predict The honest limits of this entire theory, including why rice growing Bengal produced one of India's most distinguished intellectual traditions and why wheat growing Punjab is home to the deeply communal langar tradition, both of which complicate any simple version of this story How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete wheat belt and rice belt heritage circuit to life for international travellers Experience the Two Indias With 5 Senses Tours Our Delhi tours take you through the heart of India's wheat belt, the Indo-Gangetic plain that has grown wheat for over four thousand years, at https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/] Our Kerala tours take you into the rice belt, where the August festival of Onam and centuries of paddy cultivation define the landscape, at https://5sensestours.com/tour/kerala-5-days/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/kerala-5-days/] Our Kolkata tours and Kolkata city tour take you into rice growing Bengal, where the Nabanna festival celebrates the new rice harvest each winter, at https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/] and https://5sensestours.com/tour/kolkata-city-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/kolkata-city-tour/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

24 de jun de 202620 min
Portada del episodio Chanakya's 40 Ways to Steal: How Ancient India's Most Dangerous Book Catalogued Every Way to Rob a Government, and How a Librarian Found It Again Eight Hundred Years After It Vanished

Chanakya's 40 Ways to Steal: How Ancient India's Most Dangerous Book Catalogued Every Way to Rob a Government, and How a Librarian Found It Again Eight Hundred Years After It Vanished

In 1905, a young Sanskrit scholar named Rudrapatna Shamasastry was working through a heap of palm leaf manuscripts in the Mysore Oriental Library, doing the kind of routine cataloguing work a librarian does every day. Then he opened one written in the Grantha script, and the words stopped being routine. He was holding the Arthashastra. Chanakya's lost political treatise, written for the Mauryan Empire roughly twenty four centuries earlier. A book European scholars believed might never have survived, because it had vanished from circulation sometime around the 12th century and had not been seen by a single scholar anywhere on earth for nearly eight hundred years. Buried inside its second book is a chapter Chanakya titled, with characteristic bluntness, Detection of Embezzlement by Government Officials. In it, the man who helped build one of the largest empires in the ancient world catalogued, in exhaustive detail, exactly forty distinct ways a government treasury official could steal from the state. This episode tells the story of that chapter, the empire it was written to protect, and the librarian who rescued it from eight centuries of silence. What You Will Discover in This Episode The complete story of Chanakya, also known as Kautilya, who helped a young Chandragupta Maurya build the first great political unification of the Indian subcontinent around 321 BCE, and his likely connection to the ancient university of Takshashila The forty distinct embezzlement techniques catalogued in Book Two, Chapter Eight of the Arthashastra, including mismatched gift records, phantom recipients and unrecorded raw materials, described with a precision that reads like a modern forensic accounting textbook Chanakya's investigative method of separately interrogating every official connected to a suspicious transaction, the treasurer, the authoriser, the receiver, the payer, to prevent coordinated false testimony, a principle still used in fraud investigations today The honest limitation Chanakya built into his own system, comparing the near impossibility of catching a dishonest official to determining whether a fish swimming underwater has swallowed any of the water around it How the Arthashastra, an influential and widely cited text for centuries, simply disappeared from circulation around the 12th century, vanishing so completely that an entire tradition of European scholarship grew up believing ancient India had learned its principles of statecraft from the Greeks The story of Rudrapatna Shamasastry, born in 1868 on the banks of the Kaveri river, who mastered Sanskrit, Vedic literature, Prakrit, English, German and French before becoming the Mysore Oriental Library cataloguer who discovered the lost manuscript in 1905, published the Sanskrit edition in 1909, and completed the first English translation in 1915 Why Shamasastry's discovery has been called an epoch making event in the history of the study of ancient Indian polity, and how it overturned a settled European assumption about where ancient India's statecraft came from Where the original palm leaf manuscript is preserved today, at the Oriental Research Institute in Mysore, alongside nearly sixty thousand other classical Indian manuscripts How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete story of Chanakya, Takshashila and the Mysore manuscript discovery to life for international travellers Experience Chanakya's Mysore With 5 Senses Tours The palm leaf manuscript Shamasastry discovered in 1905 is still preserved at the Oriental Research Institute in Mysore, alongside the Mysore Palace and the city's deep Sanskrit scholarly tradition. Our Royal Mysore tour explores this heritage in full at https://5sensestours.com/tour/tour-of-mysore/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/tour-of-mysore/] Our Mysore day tour from Bangalore covers the same heritage as a convenient day trip at https://5sensestours.com/tour/mysore-tour/ [https://5sensestours.com/tour/mysore-tour/] For a customised journey connecting Chanakya, Panini and the ancient university of Takshashila, contact us at https://5sensestours.com/ [https://5sensestours.com/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. Every tour is private, expert guided and completely customised for your group.

24 de jun de 202619 min
Portada del episodio Panini: The World's First Programmer Wrote Code in Sanskrit, Twenty Five Centuries Before Computers Existed

Panini: The World's First Programmer Wrote Code in Sanskrit, Twenty Five Centuries Before Computers Existed

In 1959 a computer scientist named John Backus invented a notation for describing the grammar of programming languages. It is called Backus Naur Form, and it is one of the foundational tools of modern computer science. Every programming language you have ever used was at some point defined using a descendant of this notation. In 1967 a researcher reading an old Sanskrit grammar wrote a letter to the Communications of the ACM, the most respected computer science journal in the world, to point out something extraordinary. Someone had already invented Backus Naur Form. Twenty five hundred years earlier. In Sanskrit. Panini was a scholar who flourished between 400 and 200 BC, and in order to describe the rules of Sanskrit grammar he invented a notation equivalent in its power to that of Backus. The researchers proposed a new name for the notation computer scientists had been using for nine years. The Panini Backus Form. This episode tells the story of Panini, the Sanskrit grammarian born near the Indus river in what is now Pakistan, who wrote a grammar so rigorous, so mechanical and so completely rule based that twenty five centuries later, computer scientists building the first programming languages discovered he had already solved their problem. What You Will Discover in This Episode The complete story of Panini, born in Shalatula near Attock on the Indus river sometime between the 4th and 7th century BC, and his likely connection to the ancient university of Taxila, which also produced Chanakya, the strategist behind the Mauryan Empire, and Charaka, the father of Ayurvedic medicine The structure of the Ashtadhyayi, Panini's eight chapter grammar of Sanskrit containing approximately 4000 sutras, generative rules that completely define the language mechanically rather than through memorised examples, in a structure modern linguists compare directly to a formal computer programming language How Panini classified 1700 basic linguistic elements into systematic categories using single letter symbolic markers called anubandhas, a technique functionally identical to how modern programmers define variable classes and apply functions across entire categories of data The 1967 letter to the Communications of the ACM in which researcher P Z Ingerman demonstrated that Panini's notation was structurally equivalent in power to Backus Naur Form, leading to the proposed term Panini Backus Form, and why this discovery mattered so much precisely because Backus had developed his notation independently, with no knowledge of Panini's work How Panini's rule based grammar uses recursion, transformations and metarules, rules about rules, in an architecture that mirrors exactly how a modern compiler operates, where certain rules transform raw input and higher order rules determine which transformations apply and in which order Why Sanskrit, structured according to Panini's deterministic grammar, has become a subject of active research in modern artificial intelligence and large language models, with researchers finding that Panini's generative rules offer measurable computational efficiency advantages over languages that rely on memorised patterns The honest and important distinction between what Panini actually achieved, a complete formal system describing an existing human language, and what Backus and Naur achieved, an artificial language built for a machine, and why the structural toolkit required to solve both problems with total precision turned out to be, almost exactly, the same toolkit How Panini connects to India's broader ancient scientific tradition, including Kanada's atomic theory in Gujarat, the calculus described by Karnataka's mathematicians five centuries before Newton, and the modern physics achievements of Kolkata's Bengali scientists, forming an unbroken line of rigorous Indian thought spanning more than two thousand years How 5 Senses Tours brings the complete ancient Indian science and intellectual heritage trail to life for international travellers through expert guided experiences connecting Delhi, Gujarat, Karnataka and Kolkata Experience Panini's World With 5 Senses Tours Panini's birthplace near the Indus river sits within reach of one of the most historically layered regions accessible from northern India, and the broader story he belongs to stretches across the entire subcontinent. Our Delhi tours connect international travellers to the closest major gateway for exploring this ancient intellectual landscape at https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-delhi-tours/] Travellers who want to walk the same ground that shaped Kanada's atomic theory can extend their journey to our Ahmedabad tours in Gujarat at https://5sensestours.com/home-ahmedabad-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-ahmedabad-tours/] The calculus described by Karnataka's mathematicians five centuries before Newton comes alive through our Karnataka tours at https://5sensestours.com/home-karnataka-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-karnataka-tours/] The quantum physics breakthroughs of Kolkata's Bengali scientists are covered in full through our Kolkata tours at https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/ [https://5sensestours.com/home-kolkata-tours/] For a customised journey tracing the complete ancient Indian science and intellectual heritage trail, explore our full range of tours at https://5sensestours.com/ [https://5sensestours.com/] 5 Senses Tours is recognised by India's Ministry of Tourism, winner of the Tripadvisor Travellers Choice Award and the Outlook Responsible Tourism Award. 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21 de jun de 202618 min